Fall 2019 Course Syllabi
Incidents of academic dishonesty may be documented by the faculty member with a copy of the documentation maintained by the department/division chair. A letter of explanation will be sent to the student. Cheating may affect the student in accordance with the faculty member’s grading policy. The student may appeal the faculty member’s penalty to the department chair. Student disciplinary action may result in accordance with the Student Conduct Policy, found in the Student Handbook. Academic dishonesty would include, but is not limited to, the following types of behaviors: a) Misrepresenting another individual’s work as one’s own, e.g. plagiarism from hard copy or the Internet. b) Copying from another student during an exam. c) Altering one’s exam after grading for the purpose of enhancing one’s grade. d) Submitting the same paper to more than one class. e) Use of any material or device not approved by the instructor during an exam. f) Turning in reports intended to be based on field collection data but which are, in fact, not. g) Failure to respect the confidentiality of persons served or studied and to maintain the professional standards for ethical conduct as set forth in The Handbook of School Psychology published by the national Association of School Psychologists. What does this mean for this course? In terms of written work, this means that participants have the responsibility to make it very clear in all written work what portion of the work the participant wrote and what was written by other people. For example, it is perfectly acceptable, and even encouraged, that participants use materials and ideas provided by others, such as lesson planning web sites, workshop leaders, mentor teachers, or curriculum guides. However, participants need to indicate (such as in a footnote) where they got the information that they are adapting for the assignment. In the long- term, this will be VERY helpful, as participants may not remember the source of the ideas and might need or want to go back to that source for additional copies or more ideas. Additionally, the work participants turn in for this class must be specifically written for the assignments in this course, this semester -- participants may not turn in work (either in whole or part) that they have used for a grade in another course, or that was previously turned in by others students in this course. So, participants must make the original source of their ideas explicit in course assignments and must complete exams independently. If participants have any concerns or questions about how to appropriately indicate what is their own work and what is derived from the work of others, please see the instructor during office hours, or if that time is not convenient, call or email the instructor to set an appointment time. Failure to accurately reference original sources falls under the category of academic dishonesty and will result in the following: The first time a problem of this sort appears in an assignment, the instructor will assume that it is unintentional and will ask the participant to re-write the assignment. Points may be deducted from the assignment at the instructor’s discretion. The participant will be required to meet with
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